| | Denali CD Denali Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
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Our Price: $11.65 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $9.90
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Debut;Prod.By Mark Linkous & Allen Weatherhead-Sparklehorse
Denali: Maura Davis (vocals, guitar, organ); Cam DiNunzio (guitar); Kelley Davis (bass, keyboards); Jonathan Fuller (drums). Personnel: Maura Davis (vocals, Fender Rhodes piano); Cam DiNunzio (guitar, organ, sampler); Keeley Davis (organ, synthesizer, sampler); Mark Linkous (synthesizer, bass drum, sampler); Jonathan Fuller (drums, sampler). Recording information: Sound Of Music, Richmond, VA (12/2001). Photographers: Shane McCauley; Tim Owen; Jasper Coolidge. Denali is part trip-hop, part Fugazi, combining the sultry vocals of Maura Davis with dark electronics and the glacial guitar sound of her older brother, Keeley Davis' band Engine Down. On their stunning debut, the Richmond, VA, foursome can sound as crisp and ethereal as Portishead ("You File"), as otherworldly as Tom Waits ("Loose Me"), and as atmospheric as Radiohead ("Relief"). On "Everybody Knows" Denali lays down towering spy music -- a sound that characterizes them best -- remote, spectral, and always a little mysterious. ~ Charles Spano
CMJ (4/15/02, p.10) - "...A tranquil mix of Rhodes, weepy guitars, feedback and compelling drumbeats...This is one icy avalanche you won't mind being buried under." Purchase Denali CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Interpol Turn On The Bright Lights CD (2002)
Denali
$9.95 The stunning debut album that incorporates so many postpunk influences: Joy Division, Television, Morrissey, . Includes the bonus track "Specialist".
Interpol: Carlos D., Daniel Kessler, Paul Banks, Samuel Fogarino. Audio Mixers: Gareth Jones ; Peter Katis. Recording information: Tarquin Studios. Photographers: Andrew Zaeh; Sean McCabe. Unknown Contributor Roles: Daniel Kessler; Paul Banks; Sam Fogarino. One might go into a review ...
| | Death Cab For Cutie You Can Play These Songs With Chords CD (2002)
Denali
$10.99 This release compiles the band's early cassette-only release YOU CAN PLAY THESE SONGS WITH CHORDS, 7" tracks, plus previously unreleased covers and outtakes. Death Cab For Cutie includes: Ben Gibbard, Chris Walla. This is a pretty good 18-track collection of rarities and unreleased material. It's not recommended to newcomers who want an introduction to the band or casual listeners who want only one or two of their CDs, but Death ...
| | Denali Instinct CD (2003)
Denali
$11.59
| | Cure CD (2004) Enhanced CD
Denali
$10.59 This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. The Cure: Robert Smith (vocals, ...
| | Cure Pornography: Deluxe Edition CDs (1982) Bonus Tracks; Remastered; Digipak
Denali
$12.25
| | Dinosaur Jr Beyond CD (2007) Digipak
Denali
$10.09
| | Sandro 30 Aniversario CD (1993)
Denali
$9.05
| | Christos Rafalides Manhattan Vibes CD (2002)
Denali
$11.45 On his first release as a leader, vibraphonist Christos Rafalides album takes the listener from the deep groove of tribal African rhythms of "Flamingo Strut," to the contemporary jazz sounds of "Pocket" with guest soloist Randy Brecker, to the relentless
Personnel: Christos Rafalides (vibroaphone, marimba); John Benitez (vocals, bass, percussion); Steve Hass (vocals, drums, percussion); Mary Wormworth (vocals); Randy Brecker (trumpet); Vinny Valentino (guitar); Luisito Quintero (percussion). Recorded at the Carraige House, Stamford, Connecticut in July 2001. Personnel: Christos Rafalides (vibraphone, marimba); John Benítez (vocals, acoustic bass, electric bass, percussion); Steve Hass (vocals, drums, percussion); Mary Wormworth (vocals); Vinny Valentino (guitar); Randy Brecker (trumpet); ...
| | Neil Young Are You Passionate? CD (2002)
Denali
$10.39 Personnel includes: Neil Young (vocals, guitar, piano); Frank "Poncho" Sanpedro (vocals, guitar); Booker T. Jones (vocals, organ, vibraphone); Donald "Duck" Dunn (vocals, bass); Ralph Molina (vocals, drums); Pegi & Astrid Young (vocals); Tom Bray (trumpet); Billy Talbot (bass); Steve "Smokey" Potts (drums, bongos, tambourine). Producers: Neil Young, Booker T. Jones, Duck Dunn, Poncho Sampedro. Engineers include: Tim Mulligan, John Hanlon, Aaron Prellwitz. Recorded at The Site, Marin County, California and Toast, San Francisco, California. Neil Young had been playing with Booker T. & the MG's since the mid-'90s, touring heavily with the Stax house band, but the soul grooves on 2002's Are You Passionate?, the first album he cut with the group as a backing band, still come as a surprise. It could be because that even when he assembled the Bluenotes for the proto-neo-swing This Note's for You, he never tried to be as warm, seductive, and romantic as he does here. That's right, the title is no joke -- this is a romantic album, grounded with tight Southern soul rhythms and dressed in Young's signature fuzz-tone Les Paul. No matter the topic of the song, the essential sound is the same: a lazy soul groove, built on what Booker T. & the MG's did in the late '60s, vamping over Neil's three chords as he croons, usually in a falsetto but sometimes in a gruff lower register, while kicking out a variation of "I Can't Turn You Loose" (most notably heard on the opener, "You're My Girl," but rearing its head elsewhere). This is even true of "Let's Roll," a song inspired by the final words of Todd Beamer, one of the passengers on Flight 93 who helped overtake terrorists intent on flying a plane into Washington D.C.; though it's one of the first major post-9/11 songs, written by an artist notorious for his support of Reagan, it is neither reactionary nor all that moving -- mostly, it just sounds like another mid-tempo groover on an album filled with them. And that's the main problem with the record -- though it reads well on paper and is certainly more ambitious than any Neil Young record in ...
| | Statistics CD (2003) Extended Play
Denali
$9.49
| | Eighties Combat Frustration Through Imperfection CD (2004) (Import) Import; Japan
Denali
$36.29
| | APB Something To Believe In - 20th Anniversary Edition CDs (1985)
Denali
$12.85 Personnel: Iain Slater (vocals); Glenn Roberts (guitar); George Cheyne (drums); Mikey Craighead, Nick Jones (percussion). Liner Note Author: Matt Pinfield. Recording information: Barclay Towers, Edinburgh, Scotland (1984-1989); Castle Sound Studios, Edinburgh, Scotland (1984-1989); Hofstra University, Hofstra, NY (1984-1989); Malibu Night Club, Lido Beach, NY (1984-1989); Plaza Sound, New York, NY (1984-1989); The Schoolhouse, Ellon (1984-1989); Wilfs Planet, Edinburgh, Scotland (1984-1989). Before they completed their debut LP, Scotland's APB first issued a singles compilation, 1985's Something to Believe In. Straying into the territory of jerky indie structures popularized by bands like Wire, APB would emphasize their peculiarities underneath a pop template, fashioning short, tight guitar riffs in the middle of songs which could've been sung by Debbie Harry if given the right production. But the band's sub-funk Scottish rock wore thin as a prolonged collection of singles. ~ Dean Carlson Following a four-year run of singles--the A-sides of which are all included here--the first album by A Certain Ratio-influenced Scots APB is a driving mix of neo-funk urgency, post-punk dynamics and, in singer Iain Slater's commanding basslines, a strong dose of booming dub reggae. Slater's heavily-accented vocals and his mantra-like lyrics are mostly beside the point, since SOMETHING TO BELIEVE IN is primarily a collection of jagged dance grooves. Slater's prominent bass is supported by Glenn Roberts' scratch guitar, while the chattering keyboards of Neil Innes (not the Bonzo Dog Band singer/songwriter) and George Cheyne and Mikey Craighead's drums and percussion keep things chugging ahead. Less off-kilter than the often-freeform A Certain Ratio, APB's music, from the compelling throb of "Shoot You Down" to the sunnier, more pop-oriented "Summer Love" and "So Many Broken Hearts," was a regular presence on U.S. college radio stations in the mid-80s. Unfortunately, the band never graduated beyond an appreciative cult audience. Certain bands throughout rock history have managed to enjoy great success in certain regions, but not on a wide scale. One such band would definitely ...
| | Bob Dylan Christmas In The Heart CD (2009)
Denali
$12.85 Personnel: Bob Dylan (vocals, guitar, harmonica, electric piano); Robert Joyce, Walt Harrah, Randy Crenshaw, Abby DeWald, Amanda Barrett (vocals); David Hidalgo (guitar, mandolin, violin, accordion); Phil Upchurch (guitar); Donnie Herron (steel guitar, mandolin, violin, trumpet); Patrick Warren (piano, celesta, organ); George Recile (drums, percussion). Audio Mixer: David Bianco. After the initial shock fades, the existence of CHRISTMAS IN THE HEART seems perhaps inevitable. After all, the thing Bob Dylan loves most of all are songs that are handed down from generation to generation, songs that are part of the American fabric, songs so common they never seem to have been written. These are the songs Dylan chooses to sing on CHRISTMAS IN THE HEART, a cheerfully old-fashioned holiday album from its Norman Rockwell-esque cover to its joyous backing vocals. Apart from the breakneck "Must Be Santa," which barrelhouses like a barroom, Dylan doesn't really reinterpret these songs as much as simply play them with his crackerjack road band, dropping in a little flair -- restoring "we'll have to muddle through somehow" to "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," singing the opening of "O Come All Ye Faithful" in its original Latin -- but never pushing tunes in unexpected directions. Many would argue having Dylan croon these carols is unexpected enough and, true, there are times his gravelly rumble is a bit pronounced, but nothing here feels forced, it all feels rather fun, provided you're on the same wavelength as latter-day Bob, where the sound and swing of the band is as important as the song, where there's an undeniable nostalgic undertow to all the proceedings. And, of course, there's no better time for celebratory sound, swing, and nostalgia than the holidays, which may be ...
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